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  • A blind neighbour holds a piece of soap to Asumpaheme who is also blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) Despite herhandicap, she has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0054.jpg
  • Asumpaheme, who is blind, collects water at a water hole She is blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) Despite herhandicap, she has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0055.jpg
  • Asumpaheme, who is blind, goes to collect water at a water hole. Her grandchild is strapped to her back. She is blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) Despite herhandicap, she has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0058.jpg
  • Asumpaheme, who is blind, rolls food in her hands to feed her grandchld. She is helped by her daughter. She is blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) Despite herhandicap, she has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0057.jpg
  • Asumpaheme, who is blind, works with her daughter to sort beans. She is blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) Despite herhandicap, she has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0056.jpg
  • Anafo, a blind farmer works in his field watched by a child who guides him. Anafo is blind due to the entirely preventable 'River Blindness' (Onchocerciasis). despite his handicap, Anafo has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0060.jpg
  • Anafo, a blind farmer is guided from his fields by a neighbour's child holding a stick. Anafo is blind due to the entirely preventable 'Rive Blindness' (Onchocerciasis) but despite his handicap, Anafo has no choice but to continue farming.
    SFE_030305_0059.jpg
  • Dr Mohamed Shaheen performs Cataracts surgery on a patient on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-1734.jpg
  • Dr Mohamed Shaheen performs an eye examination on 28 year old Reksona after performing Cataracts surgery the evening before on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.<br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-2056.jpg
  • Dr Mohamed Shaheen performs Cataracts surgery on a patient on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-1776.jpg
  • Dr Mohamed Shaheen performs Cataracts surgery on a patient on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-1826.jpg
  • A nurse prepares a needle for Dr Mohamed Shaheen to perform Cataracts surgery on a patient on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-1742.jpg
  • A nurse prepares a patient for Dr Mohamed Shaheen to perform Cataracts surgery on a patient on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-1728.jpg
  • A young boy receives an eye examination from Dr Mohamed Shaheen on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.  <br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-2238.jpg
  • Dr Mohamed Shaheen performs an eye examination on a patient after performing Cataracts surgery the evening before on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.<br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-2120.jpg
  • Patients wait to see the doctor  for an eye examination after receiving Cataracts surgery the evening before on the IFB Jibon Tari Floating Hospital moored up on the banks of the Modhumoti River.  The Jibon Tari normally moves location every 3 months to remote riverine and offshore areas. It was launched in 1999 and has been major success, reaching more that 200,000 people.<br />
Impact Foundation Bangladesh (IFB) provide care, support and treatment to people with disabilities in Bangladesh.
    10-IFB-2078.jpg
  • An elderly blind Hmong woman twisting lengths of hemp bark together to form one long yarn, Ban Tatong, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The yarn is wrapped around the hand in a figure of 8 creating a ball shape. Making hemp fabric is a long and laborious process; the end result is a strong durable cloth with qualities similar to linen which the Hmong women use to make their traditional clothing. In Lao PDR, hemp is now only cultivated in remote mountainous areas of the north. The remote and roadless village of Ban Tatong is situated along the Nam Kang river (an offshoot of the Nam Ou) and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026659cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly blind Hmong woman twisting lengths of hemp bark together to form one long yarn, Ban Tatong, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The yarn is wrapped around the hand in a figure of 8 creating a ball shape. Making hemp fabric is a long and laborious process; the end result is a strong durable cloth with qualities similar to linen which the Hmong women use to make their traditional clothing. In Lao PDR, hemp is now only cultivated in remote mountainous areas of the north. The remote and roadless village of Ban Tatong is situated along the Nam Kang river (an offshoot of the Nam Ou) and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026659cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly blind Hmong woman twisting lengths of hemp bark together to form one long yarn, Ban Tatong, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The yarn is wrapped around the hand in a figure of 8 creating a ball shape. Making hemp fabric is a long and laborious process; the end result is a strong durable cloth with qualities similar to linen which the Hmong women use to make their traditional clothing. In Lao PDR, hemp is now only cultivated in remote mountainous areas of the north. The remote and roadless village of Ban Tatong is situated along the Nam Kang river (an offshoot of the Nam Ou) and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026666cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly blind Hmong woman twisting lengths of hemp bark together to form one long yarn, Ban Tatong, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The yarn is wrapped around the hand in a figure of 8 creating a ball shape. Making hemp fabric is a long and laborious process; the end result is a strong durable cloth with qualities similar to linen which the Hmong women use to make their traditional clothing. In Lao PDR, hemp is now only cultivated in remote mountainous areas of the north. The remote and roadless village of Ban Tatong is situated along the Nam Kang river (an offshoot of the Nam Ou) and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026666cc_1.jpg
  • Whitby is a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby various_L.jpg
  • Unsighted or partially-sighted pedestrian crosses London Bridge during the evening rush hour. Using his stick to feel his way through the crowds and listening to the sounds of the city, he walks along surrounded by others on the pavement and in a passing bus. Commuters stride alongside a bus followed by others walking out of the City of London. There has been a crossing over the Thames here since the Romans first forded the river in the early 1st Century with subsequent medieval and Victorian stone bridges becoming an important thoroughfare from the City on the north bank, to Southwark on the south where transport hubs such as the mainline station gets commuters to the suburbs and satellite towns.
    london_bridge_commuters38-20-04-2015...jpg
  • Seen from a mid-level of the Eiffel Tower, we are looking down on the 15th arrondissement of Paris. Before us are the rooftops of apartment buildings in one of the 20 arrondissements (administrative districts) of the capital city of France. Just adjacent of the Rive Gauche (left bank) of the River Seine and sharing the Montparnasse district with the 6th and 14th arrondissements, it is the city's most populous arrondissement with an area of 8.5 sq km (3.3 sq miles, or 2,101 acres). Many have lead or zinc roofs that are seen as grey material on the tops of these urban homes. It’s so bright that some residents have lowered blinds to keep glare out of their cool rooms that overlook other parts of Paris, its trees and curved, narrow streets.
    paris_rooftops02-16-07-2002.jpg
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